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Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
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Kk's Busy Day (Hardcover)
Michelle Grubbs, Lisa Smith; Illustrated by Megan Wagener
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R737
Discovery Miles 7 370
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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First published in 1993. The United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro, in June
1992, was a unique event in the annals of international affairs.
The 'Earth Summit' brought more heads of state and government
together than any previous meeting, and five separate agreements
were signed by most of the participating governments. It was billed
as the world's greatest opportunity to resolve pressing problems of
continuing poverty and environmental destruction and to set the
world on a path of sustainable development. Thirty thousand people
descended upon the city, and the Summit received a blaze of
publicity around the world. Yet despite the vast efforts devoted to
it, and the unprecedented press coverage which it received, to many
the Earth Summit is still a mystery. The outcome has been labelled
as everything from a disastrous fiasco to an outstanding success.
Which was it; indeed, what was it? What came out of it? What was
actually agreed, and what does it mean for the future of
environment and development issues? This book presents a major
summary and analysis of UNCED. It explains the background to the
conference, its major achievements and disappointments, and the
legacy which it has left. Individual chapters examine in detail
each of the five main agreements signed at Rio, providing a short
description of the negotiating background, analysis of the final
text, and the likely implications. This title will be of great
interest to students of environmental studies.
Originally published in 1999, The Kyoto Protocol provides a
detailed discussion on the history, terms and implications of the
Kyoto Protocol 1997. It explains the meaning of provision on
emissions trading and other flexibility mechanisms, and provides a
quantitative analysis using the Energy and Environment Programme's
emissions trading model. It also contains the full text of the
Kyoto Protocol and developments at the 4th Conference of the
Parties in December 1998. This book will be of interest to
academics working in the field of climate change, as well as the
broader area of environment and sustainability.
Originally published in 1999, The Kyoto Protocol provides a
detailed discussion on the history, terms and implications of the
Kyoto Protocol 1997. It explains the meaning of provision on
emissions trading and other flexibility mechanisms, and provides a
quantitative analysis using the Energy and Environment Programme's
emissions trading model. It also contains the full text of the
Kyoto Protocol and developments at the 4th Conference of the
Parties in December 1998. This book will be of interest to
academics working in the field of climate change, as well as the
broader area of environment and sustainability.
Complying with the forthcoming tightening of CO2 emission
allocations in the EU may mean big bills for the industries
affected. In this special issue of Climate Policy journal, leading
experts examine the impacts on competitiveness and the commercial
incentives available from the CO2 allowance allocations under the
methodologies, and whether - and if so at what stage - the ETS
itself may need to be amended. The study is multidisciplinary,
combining economic, legal and policy analysis with specific studies
of impacts on electricity, cement and other industrial sectors and
the allocation issues. It brings together the results of research
conducted over the past two year from various research centres and
consultancies in Europe, and in particular, work commissioned by
the Carbon Trust and Climate Strategies Network. Through these, it
presents the most comprehensive and detailed set of analyses yet
conducted of the impacts of allocation on competitiveness - one of
the most critical issues for the sectors affected and for the
operation of the ETS.
The EU emissions trading scheme is the largest emissions control
scheme in the world, capping almost half of European CO2 emissions.
As the scheme emerges from its pilot phase, this special issue of
Climate Policy journal analyses the lessons learned from the last
two years and their implications for phase II. The volume presents
some of the key analyses that helped inform the European
Commission's decisions on national allocation plans, with research
ranging from detailed country-by-country comparisons to more
generic analysis that puts forward the case for harmonization.
Challenging calls to seperate electricity from other sectors, a
macroeconomic study suggests that the biggest efficiency gains come
from inter-sectoral trading, even more than international trading.
Empirical papers, which look at the expected scarcity of allowances
in the market and merge models for the power and non-power sectors
to project emissions and contrast these to the aggregate allocation
volume, are complemented by two numerical simulations of trade and
distributional effects, estimating the efficiency gains of the EU
ETS in phase I and assessing allocation and distribution effects in
the RGGI context.
Meeting targets aimed at tackling the climate change challenge
requires moving towards a low-carbon economy. These targets can
only be met with major reductions in carbon emissions from the
electricity sector. Written by a team of leading academics and
industry experts, Delivering a Low Carbon Electricity System
analyses the social, technological, economic and political issues
that affect the attempt to create a low-carbon electricity sector
and assesses the main instruments for achieving this aim. The book
begins by looking at how low-carbon generation technologies might
be added in sufficient quantity to the electricity system. Next, it
examines how networks and the demand side can help to decarbonise
the sector. It then highlights the role of innovation and discusses
instruments for promoting technological progress. Finally, given
the economic framework and technological possibilities, it presents
a number of general and specific policy instruments and options for
the future.
First published in 1993. The United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro, in June
1992, was a unique event in the annals of international affairs.
The 'Earth Summit' brought more heads of state and government
together than any previous meeting, and five separate agreements
were signed by most of the participating governments. It was billed
as the world's greatest opportunity to resolve pressing problems of
continuing poverty and environmental destruction and to set the
world on a path of sustainable development. Thirty thousand people
descended upon the city, and the Summit received a blaze of
publicity around the world. Yet despite the vast efforts devoted to
it, and the unprecedented press coverage which it received, to many
the Earth Summit is still a mystery. The outcome has been labelled
as everything from a disastrous fiasco to an outstanding success.
Which was it; indeed, what was it? What came out of it? What was
actually agreed, and what does it mean for the future of
environment and development issues? This book presents a major
summary and analysis of UNCED. It explains the background to the
conference, its major achievements and disappointments, and the
legacy which it has left. Individual chapters examine in detail
each of the five main agreements signed at Rio, providing a short
description of the negotiating background, analysis of the final
text, and the likely implications. This title will be of great
interest to students of environmental studies.
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Kk's Busy Day (Paperback)
Michelle Grubbs, Lisa Smith; Illustrated by Megan Wagener
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R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The EU emissions trading scheme is the largest emissions control
scheme in the world, capping almost half of European CO2 emissions.
As the scheme emerges from its pilot phase, this special issue of
Climate Policy journal analyses the lessons learned from the last
two years and their implications for phase II. The volume presents
some of the key analyses that helped inform the European
Commission's decisions on national allocation plans, with research
ranging from detailed country-by-country comparisons to more
generic analysis that puts forward the case for harmonization.
Challenging calls to seperate electricity from other sectors, a
macroeconomic study suggests that the biggest efficiency gains come
from inter-sectoral trading, even more than international trading.
Empirical papers, which look at the expected scarcity of allowances
in the market and merge models for the power and non-power sectors
to project emissions and contrast these to the aggregate allocation
volume, are complemented by two numerical simulations of trade and
distributional effects, estimating the efficiency gains of the EU
ETS in phase I and assessing allocation and distribution effects in
the RGGI context.
** Tightening of CO2 emission allocations in the EU may mean big
bills for industries affected--what impacts will this have on their
competitiveness? ** Leading experts analyze the consequences on
competitiveness and profitability for a range of industrial sectors
and the responses available to them ** First ever in-depth study of
this critical dimension of carbon emissions trading schemes This
special issue of the Climate Policy journal examines the impacts on
the competitiveness and the commercial incentives available from
the CO2 allowance allocations under the EU Emissions Trading
Scheme, and discusses appropriate allocation methodologies, and
whether-and if so at what stage-the ETS itself may need to be
amended. The study is multidisciplinary, combining economic, legal
and policy analysis with specific studies of impacts on
electricity, cement and other industrial sectors and allocation
issues. It brings together the results of research conducted over
the past two years from various research centers and consultancies
in Europe, and in particular work commissioned by the Carbon Trust
and Climate Strategies Network. Through these, it presents the most
comprehensive and detailed set of analyses of allocation and
competitiveness yet conducted. Lead authors include: Damien
Demailly, Michael Grubb, Angus Johnston, Karsten Neuhoff, Jos Sijm
and Robin Smale.
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